Halama Jonathan, McKane Robert, Barnhart Bradley, Pettus Paul, Brookes Allen, Djang Kevin, Phan Vivian, Chokshi Sonali, Graham James
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Corvallis, OR, United States of America.
NCASI, Corvallis, OR, United States of America.
PLOS Water. 2023 Nov 20;2(11):1-23. doi: 10.1371/journal.pwat.0000155.
Modeling large-scale hydrological impacts brought about by site-level green and gray stormwater remediation actions is difficult because urbanized areas are extremely complex dynamic landscapes that include engineered features that, by design, expedite urban runoff to streams, creeks, and other water bodies to reduce urban flooding during storm events. Many urban communities use heavily engineered gray infrastructure to achieve that goal, along with more recent additions of green infrastructure such as rain gardens, bioswales, and riparian corridors. Therefore, successfully characterizing those design details and associated management practices, interactions, and impacts requires a detailed understanding of how fine and course-scale hydrologic processes and routing are altered and managed in urban watersheds. To enhance hydrologic modeling capabilities of urban watersheds, we implemented a number of improvements to an existing ecohydrology model called VELMA-Visualizing Ecosystem Land Management Assessments-including the addition of spatially explicit engineered features that impact urban hydrology (e.g., impervious surfaces, curbed roadways, stormwater routing) and refinement to the computational representations of evapotranspiration by adding impervious surface evaporation. We demonstrate improved capabilities for modeling within complex urbanized watersheds by simulating stream runoff within the Longfellow Creek watershed, City of Seattle, Washington (WA), United States (US) with and without these added urban watershed characteristics. The results demonstrate that the newly improved VELMA model allows for more accurate modeling of hydrology within urban watersheds. Being a fate and transport ecohydrology model, the improved hydrologic flow enhances VELMA's current capacity for modeling nutrient, contaminant, and thermal loadings.
对场地层面的绿色和灰色雨水修复行动所带来的大规模水文影响进行建模是困难的,因为城市化地区是极其复杂的动态景观,其中包括一些工程特征,这些特征在设计上会加速城市径流排入溪流、小河和其他水体,以减少暴雨期间的城市内涝。许多城市社区使用高度工程化的灰色基础设施来实现这一目标,同时还新增了一些绿色基础设施,如雨水花园、生物滞留池和河岸走廊。因此,要成功地描述这些设计细节以及相关的管理实践、相互作用和影响,就需要详细了解城市流域中精细和粗尺度的水文过程及径流是如何改变和管理的。为了提高城市流域的水文建模能力,我们对现有的生态水文模型VELMA(可视化生态系统土地管理评估)进行了多项改进,包括添加影响城市水文的空间明确工程特征(如不透水表面、路缘道路、雨水径流),并通过添加不透水表面蒸发来完善蒸散的计算表示。我们通过模拟美国华盛顿州西雅图市朗费罗溪流域在有和没有这些新增城市流域特征情况下的溪流径流,展示了在复杂城市化流域内进行建模的改进能力。结果表明,新改进的VELMA模型能够更准确地模拟城市流域内的水文情况。作为一个归宿和迁移生态水文模型,改进后的水文流动增强了VELMA目前对养分、污染物和热负荷进行建模的能力。